
Access to Care by Older Rural People in a Post-Reform Chinese Hospital: an Ethical Evaluation of Anthropological Findings
Author(s) -
Xiang Zou,
JingBao Nie
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
asian bioethics review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.249
H-Index - 7
eISSN - 1793-8759
pISSN - 1793-9453
DOI - 10.1007/s41649-019-00080-8
Subject(s) - dignity , scholarship , denial , premise , china , nursing , sociology , ethics of care , value (mathematics) , public relations , economic growth , medicine , political science , psychology , law , linguistics , philosophy , machine learning , computer science , psychoanalysis , economics
This paper examines older people's access to care experiences in rural China by integrating anthropological investigation with ethical inquiry. Six months of fieldwork in a post-reform primary hospital show how rural residents struggle to access gerontological and nursing care under socially disadvantageous conditions. This anthropological investigation highlights the unmet needs in medical and nursing care for older people, as well as some social, institutional and structural elements that impede access to care. Centring on protecting the vulnerable as informed by feminist ethics scholarship, this paper argues that the failure to meet older people's dependency needs is unjust, on the premise that it suggests a denial of the inherent value, rights and dignity of older people. This paper appeals for the provision of greater care and support by the state through putting in place social arrangements that better advance older people's access to care. Some policy recommendations concerning health and social care reform for older people in rural China are also proposed.